Hantsport station
Hantsport station in Hantsport, Nova Scotia, Canada, was built in 1944 as a replacement for an earlier station destroyed by fire in 1943. The brick Tudor revival station was designed by Canadian Pacific Railway architects. The station played an important role in controlling the large shipments of gypsum through the port of Hantsport by the Dominion Atlantic Railway and later the Windsor and Hantsport Railway until 2011 when the gypsum mines around Windsor closed.[1][2] [3] The station is protected by both federal and provincial heritage laws. It was designated a historic railway station by the federal government in 1992[4] and as a provincial heritage building in 1995.[5]
Hantsport | |
---|---|
Exterior view of train station | |
Location | 15 Station Street, Hantsport, Nova Scotia Canada |
Coordinates | 45°04′07″N 64°10′35″W |
Owned by | Windsor and Hantsport Railway and formerly by Dominion Atlantic Railway |
History | |
Opened | 1944 |
References
- Thompson, Ashley (August 23, 2012). "Keeping up appearances". The Hants Journal. Windsor, Nova Scotia. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
- "Hantsport Railway Station, 15 Station Road, Hantsport, Nova Scotia, B0P, Canada, Formally Recognized: 1995/07/10". Canada's Historic Places. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
- "Hantsport Railway Station". The Nova Scotia Historic Places Initiative. Archived from the original on November 14, 2013. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
- "The Directory of Designated Railway Stations in Nova Scotia", Canadian Heritage
- "Hantsport Railway Station", Canadian Historic Places database
External links
Media related to Hantsport Railway Station at Wikimedia Commons
- "Hantsport Station", Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Institute
- Canada's Historic Places 7816 Hantsport Railway Station
- Canada's Historic Places 4554 Canadian Pacific Railway Station
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